What is reporting 282 mbps? It's a strange number to get from a gigabit network, although 65 mbps would be reasonable for a 100 mbps network. Are you referring to UMS' "speed check"? If so, it's not so strange as it's not suitable to measure such high speeds, as it uses very small packets when measu...

Theoretically Cat5e can handle 1 Gbps and Cat6 can handle 10 Gbps, so you're correct that Cat5e should do it. Personally I have had different experience, and I exclusively use Cat6 and has replaced (most of) my fixed Cat5e cabling in my house. The think is that these standards basically decide how r...

It looks like this is the last thing that happens before the crash, so it is probably what causes the segfault: /usr/bin/tsmuxer -v What happens when you run this manually from a terminal? It shouldn't be possible to achieve a segfault from Java whatever you do, so this is probably something resulti...

Your log information clearly indicates that UMS can't "find" the drive. I guess you should look into both permissions and how you do the mapping. Are you using normal Windows file sharing/CIFS by running Samba or similar on the NAS, or do you use some less standard way? You should also make sure tha...

As long as it's mapped to a drive letter it should work just fine. I do the same myself with no problem. The only thing I can think of is that you didn't restart UMS after adding the shared folder, or that there is some permission issue.

I've never heard of that the PS3 firmware disables UPnP/DLNA completely, but I guess as this point anything is possible. I can't really see anything more to try, from your log there simply are no attempted communication and that can only mean that the packages doesn't get there. The only thing I can...

I looked in your log at see no trace of any communications with the PS3. In my experience that only happens when the problem is on a network level so that they cannot communicate. That means it's down to: network configuration (not on the same subnet), blocked by software or OS (firewall/AV) or a bu...

You can't. They are intentionally hidden so that they shouldn't appear as normal media files, since they serve a specific function of being a thumbnail for another media file. The "real problem" here is that the PS3 doesn't allow you to view the thumbnails in a bigger size.

It seems like your UMS computer and your PS3 isn't on the same subnet. According to your log, UMS uses 192.168.1.5. Assuming that you use the standard subnet mask, that would mean that your PS3 would need to have an IP address that starts with 192.168.1. UMS and renderers can't have to go through a ...

It's good to hear that you got it to work. I still think the parsing should be more robust so that an invalid PATH doesn't prevent it from starting, so I'll have to try to find the time to do that. That said, your PATH really was invalid and wouldn't have been easy to parse "properly". Generally, I'...